Two male assistants to the principal of Lehman HS held female students in a reign of sexual terror, luring them to a dingy utility room for sex and offering one of them to a neighborhood pimp, school investigators charged yesterday.

Probers said Aaron Stroud, 22, a former football star at The Bronx school, and Clayton Fitz Coy, 25, admitted to having sex with girls as young as 17 in the school’s fifth-floor generator room within the last year.

Stroud also acknowledged to investigators that he introduced at least one of the girls to his old Lehman Lions football teammate and “self-proclaimed pimp,” all-city running back Terrell Ellis, who was apparently looking for new recruits, probers said.

As $25,000-a-year school aides, Stroud and Fitz Coy performed administrative duties for the principal and assistant principals.

What began as a routine probe by Special Schools Investigator Richard Condon into lewd comments allegedly made by Stroud and Fitz Coy to female students eventually untangled a web of degrading sexual servitude.

The investigation began last month when Principal Robert Leder reported that Fitz Coy had told a 17-year-old girl that she “needed a [penis] in her life” and “come to me so that I can give you that.”

In the course of speaking with students, probers found that both men had been soliciting sex from teenage girls for a year – and that Stroud wasn’t taking no for an answer, investigators said.

According to Condon’s report, Stroud became so frustrated with one 16-year-old spurning his sexual advances that he pinned her in a stairwell and told her “that she was going to give him what he wanted or he was going to take it.”

The girl escaped when someone walked into the stairwell.

Fitz Coy was having sex with one 17-year-old on a regular basis as of last spring, investigators said, encouraging her to ditch class for trysts at a motel.

Probers said Fitz Coy acknowledged having sex with the girl in the generator room while Stroud kept a lookout.

Stroud later introduced that girl to Ellis, who allegedly told her that “he had a house where some girls who worked for him lived” and that “she could make a lot of money meeting men,” the report said.

“I don’t know anything about it,” a defiant Fitz Coy said told The Post in a brief phone interview, adding that he resigned in November because he “had stuff to take care of.”

Stroud and Ellis could not be reached.

In his report, Condon recommended that Stroud and Fitz Coy be fired and said he was turning over his findings to Bronx DA Robert Johnson.

The Department of Education’s general counsel, Michael Best, said both men have been suspended without pay.

“This behavior is truly intolerable,” Best said. “It is a cruel abuse of trust and misuse of power. These individuals should be prosecuted to the full extent of the law.”